| John Horvath on Sun, 4 Jan 1998 03:48:46 +0100 (MET) |
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| <nettime> re: Academic Paper Tigers |
Comment: Academic Paper Tigers
One point that Hartman failed to elaborate on, which is even more
important than copyright and quotation, is that of money. The nature of
academia has changed, insofar that academic work and research from the
point of individual researchers or academicians is now pursued primarily
as a marketable commodity than for intellectual purposes. In Europe,
this trend is clearly illustrated by the position taken by the European
Commission toward RTD in its Fifth Framework of the Telematics
Programme. The undercurrents to the programme is to refocus Europe's
high standard of research and development along corporatist lines, "so
that Europe's high level of scientific and technological capability can
be translated more successfully into marketable products and services."
(A European Initiative in Electronic Commerce: Communication to the
European Parliament, the Council, the Economic and Social Committee and
the Committee of the Regions., COM(97) 157, European Commission, April
15, 1997. p. 1. See <http://www.ispo.cec .be/Ecommerce>). Hence, a major
reason why scientific publications altogether are not online yet is
because it's not profitable for them to do so. For this reason, these
works will still be available through pay-per-view channels (e.g. print)
or closed to the public, accessible only through private Intranets and
Internet 2, the latter being set up exclusively for this purpose.
John
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